Gulf Times

Venezuela refugee crisis not going to end soon: UN

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The region needs to brace itself for the arrival of even more Venezuelan migrants, as there are few signs that the exodus will end anytime soon, the head of the United Nations refugee agency said.

Speaking to reporters in Lima, UNHCR high commission­er Filippo Grandi said the internatio­nal community needs to help countries like Colombia and Peru that are absorbing the brunt of the new arrivals.

“Clearly, I think government­s in the region and we, the humanitari­an community, must step up our preparatio­n for more (migrants); this is not going to stop anytime soon,” he said of the Venezuelan crisis. “Unfortunat­ely it’s not going to stop.”

More than 2mn Venezuelan­s are thought to have left the country in recent years – one of the largest mass migrations in the western hemisphere.

Grandi said the only comparable migrant flows were from war-torn Central American nations in the 1980s.

“This is for sure the largest movement of people out of a country that we have seen in a long time – as far as we can remember,” he said. “But it’s also unusual in that there is no war in Venezuela, so this is not the same type of crisis that we saw 30 years ago.”

“We are all adapting to respond to something that is fairly new and fairly complex, but very serious,” he added.

Venezuela’s grinding economic and political crises have rattled the region. Once one of the hemisphere’s wealthiest nations, Venezuela’s oil-based economy has collapsed amid corruption, mismanagem­ent and internatio­nal sanctions.

Food and medicine shortages sweep through the nation of 32mn, and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expects inflation will hit 10mn percent in 2019.

Grandi said he visited a soup kitchen in Cucuta, Colombia – on the border with Venezuela – where he met people who were counting on the free meal to survive.

“There were people that were coming from Venezuela to have one meal, to eat and go back,” he said. “This I have not seen in other places. It really struck me.”

Venezuela accuses its neighbours of exaggerati­ng the migratory crisis as part of a larger plot to topple the socialist administra­tion of President Nicolas Maduro. But Grandi said Venezuelan officials have privately acknowledg­ed that their citizens have “needs that need to be met.”

For decades, Venezuela was a net receiver of migrants. As civil strife and guerrilla warfare rocked Peru and Colombia, many fled to oil-rich Venezuela.

And for the most part, South America is repaying that debt. Colombia and Peru – the top two destinatio­ns for Venezuelan­s – have offered temporary work and residency permits to hundreds of thousands.

Grandi said he was impressed by the region’s solidarity, but he worried about the economic costs.

“How long can this last? Resources are limited,” he said. “There is an urgent need to mobilise internatio­nal assistance.”

The US has pledged more than $100mn to aid Venezuela’s neighbours. But Washington has also ratcheted up financial sanctions on the country, which critics say have accelerate­d Venezuela’s economic collapse and are exacerbati­ng the crisis.

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